Research

The genomic basis of evolutionary differentiation among honey bees

    • 1 University of North Carolina Greensboro;
    • 2 University of California, Davis;
    • 3 Institute for Data Science & Informatics, University of Missouri;
    • 4 Centre for Genomic Regulation, The Barcelona Institute of Science and Technology;
    • 5 University of Florida;
    • 6 Oklahoma State University;
    • 7 University of Greifswald, Institute for Mathematics and Computer Science;
    • 8 University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign;
    • 9 University of Greifswald;
    • 10 New York Genome Center;
    • 11 University of Utah;
    • 12 University of Würzburg;
    • 13 Chiang Mai University;
    • 14 Johns Hopkins University;
    • 15 Baylor College of Medicine;
    • 16 University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign;
    • 17 University of Missouri
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cover of Genome Research Vol 36 Issue 6
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Abstract

In contrast to the western honey bee, Apis mellifera, other honey bee species have been largely neglected despite their importance and diversity. The genetic basis of the evolutionary diversification of honey bees remains largely unknown. Here, we provide a genome-wide comparison of three honey bee species each representing one of the three subgenera of honey bees, namely the dwarf (Apis florea), giant (A. dorsata) and cavity-nesting (A. mellifera) honey bees with bumblebees as outgroup. Our analyses resolve the phylogeny of honey bees with the dwarf honey bees diverging first. We find that evolution of increased eusocial complexity in Apis proceeds via increases in the complexity of gene regulation, which is in agreement with previous studies. However, this process seems to be related to pathways other than transcriptional control. Positive selection patterns across Apis reveal a trade-off between maintaining genome stability and generating genetic diversity, with a rapidly evolving piRNA pathway leading to genomes depleted of transposable elements, and a rapidly evolving DNA repair pathway associated with high recombination rates in all Apis species. Diversification within Apis is accompanied by positive selection in several genes whose putative functions present candidate mechanisms for lineage-specific adaptations, such as migration, immunity, and nesting behavior.

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